July 17, 2005
Some dursn't call it treason
Christian Crumlish
But the Editors have no such delicate scruples:
Posted by xian at July 17, 2005 3:10 PM | TrackBackIf Rove were working for the CPUSA, the Constitution Party, or the Black Panther Party, I doubt anyone would have a problem calling him “traitor”. But he doesn’t: he works for the premier establishment political party, a party with tens of millions of blindly loyal partisans. Somehow, clout and popularity seem to change this equation.
When Rove used national security secrets as tokens in his sectarian battle, he betrayed his country, a confidence, and a trust placed in his hands by the American people, and betrayed everyone around the world who benefits from a strong America, whose numbers are legion, and shrinking daily. He violated his allegience toward his country, and helped her enemies. The question of whether he knew he was helping her enemies, or if he was unsure, indifferent, or mistaken, is a very important question, and my personal suspicion is that the thought never crossed his mind. He is a professional political operative, who understands the requirements for winning the internecine political “war” he spent his life fighting. He has no experience in national security, and probably little training in or aptitude for it. We all make mistakes our first day on the job. This doesn’t excuse anything, but I think a more sensible objection to the word would focus on his supposed lack of anti-American intent, rather than his lack of loyalty to any particular foreign enemy.
Nonetheless, like Kristof’s objection to calling the reflexively dishonest Bush a “liar”, I think an unspoken component of Kleiman’s position is that “traitor”, even more than “liar”, is a very strong word, and strong words make people uncomfortable. But in strong situations, strong words apply, and while I can understand not feeling that “traitor” applies to Rove, it seems pretty clear how one could understand the opposite as well. Being upset by bad words is normal, but when the bad words are describing something accurately, the word is not the problem.
Furthermore, in America today, it is routinely described as “treason” when one disagrees with the President, reports accurate bad news, or fails to wave one’s GOP pom-poms with sufficient single-mindedness. Arguments about whether this word quite reaches every abstract threshold for proper use, while certainly high-minded and all that, are, today, a bit like worrying if you wore the wrong ascot to a $3 crack deal. Distasteful as it is, this is the context in which this discussion is taking place, and, in consideration of this, it is hard to see the sense in having it.
I believe your endorsement of "Traitor/Treason" here is appropriately retaliatory. As you say:
"Furthermore, in America today, it is routinely described as 'treason' when one disagrees with the President, reports accurate bad news, or fails to wave one’s GOP pom-poms with sufficient single-mindedness."
Outside that retaliatory context, a bit of Old Testament lore ("Is that Traditional Values enough for ya?") comes in handy, to indicate how irresponsible the conservatives have really been with their promiscuous Treasonairing.
"Treason" is, I believe, a unique crime in the US, because it is actually defined in the text of the Constitution. In that definition, an unusual requirement is stipulated that there must be two eyewitnesses.
I think this must hearken back to the Biblical/Talmudic requirement of two eyewitnesses for capital punishment to be imposed. This was an exercise in what is known as "building a fence around the Law."
They had this capital punishment in the law, so they made it virtually impossible to impose. The _San Hedron_ that did actually impose it once became known as "the bloody _San Hedron_."
In addition to the two eyewitnesses just being there, they also had to have warned the perpetrator, on the spot, not to commit this capital offense.
Another restriction was that, if the verdict was unanimous, it was nullified, because nothing so serious could be that obvious.
The message in this law--and in the Constitution--was pretty clear: "Stay away from this!"
The writers of the Constitution were painfully aware that the charge of Treason has always been a cover for the most unscrupulous intolerance.
